9,272 research outputs found

    SIMDET - Version 4 A Parametric Monte Carlo for a TESLA Detector

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    A new release of the parametric detector Monte Carlo program \verb+SIMDET+ (version 4.01) is now available. We describe the principles of operation and the usage of this program to simulate the response of a detector for the TESLA linear collider. The detector components are implemented according to the TESLA Technical Design Report. All detector component responses are treated in a realistic way using a parametrisation of results from the {\em ab initio} Monte Carlo program \verb+BRAHMS+. Pattern recognition is emulated using a complete cross reference between generated particles and detector response. Also, for charged particles, the covariance matrix and dE/dxdE/dx information are made available. An idealised energy flow algorithm defines the output of the program, consisting of particles generically classified as electrons, photons, muons, charged and neutral hadrons as well as unresolved clusters. The program parameters adjustable by the user are described in detail. User hooks inside the program and the output data structure are documented.Comment: 30 pages, 7 figure

    Two-step rocket engine bipropellant valve Patent

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    Solenoid two-step valve for bipropellant flow rate control to rocket engin

    Two-step rocket engine bipropellant valve concept

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    Initiating combustion of altitude control rocket engines in a precombustion chamber of ductile material reduces high pressure surges generated by hypergolic propellants. Two-step bipropellant valve concepts control initial propellant flow into precombustion chamber and subsequent full flow into main chamber

    Endoscopic Imaging of Clostridium diffìcile Colitis

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    AbstractClostridium difficile infection (CDI) is one of the most dreaded causes of hospital-acquired diarrhea with an increasing incidence. Frequently, CDI affects older and immunocompromised patients, but recent data suggests that even young and healthy persons who had previously not been exposed to an antimicrobial therapy are at risk. Although differential diagnosis of hospital-acquired diarrhea is broad, these patients are regularly committed to the endoscopy department. The video of this article focuses on typical endoscopic aspects of C. difficile colitis. This article is part of an expert video encyclopedia

    Dielectrophoresis model for the colossal electroresistance of phase-separated manganites

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    We propose a dielectrophoresis model for phase-separated manganites. Without increase of the fraction of metallic phase, an insulator-metal transition occurs when a uniform electric field applied across the system exceeds a threshold value. Driven by the dielectrophoretic force, the metallic clusters reconfigure themselves into stripes along the direction of electric field, leading to the filamentous percolation. This process, which is time-dependent, irreversible and anisotropic, is a probable origin of the colossal electroresistance in manganites.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    Patterning of dielectric nanoparticles using dielectrophoretic forces generated by ferroelectric polydomain films

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    A theoretical study of a dielectrophoretic force, i.e. the force acting on an electrically neutral particle in the inhomogeneous electric field, which is produced by a ferroelectric domain pattern, is presented. It has been shown by several researchers that artificially prepared domain patterns with given geometry in ferroelectric single crystals represent an easy and flexible method for patterning dielectric nanoobjects using dielectrophoretic forces. The source of the dielectrophoretic force is a strong and highly inhomogeneous (stray) electric field, which exists in the vicinity of the ferroelectric domain walls at the surface of the ferroelectric film. We analyzed dielectrophoretic forces in the model of a ferroelectric film of a given thickness with a lamellar 180{}^\circ domain pattern. The analytical formula for the spatial distribution of the stray field in the ionic liquid above the top surface of the film is calculated including the effect of free charge screening. The spatial distribution of the dielectrophoretic force produced by the domain pattern is presented. The numerical simulations indicate that the intersection of the ferroelectric domain wall and the surface of the ferroelectric film represents a trap for dielectric nanoparticles in the case of so called positive dielectrophoresis. The effects of electrical neutrality of dielectric nanoparticles, free charge screening due to the ionic nature of the liquid, domain pattern geometry, and the Brownian motion on the mechanism of nanoparticle deposition and the stability of the deposited pattern are discussed.Comment: Accepted in the Journal of Applied Physics, 10 pages, 5 figure

    Coulomb crystallization in expanding laser-cooled neutral plasmas

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    We present long-time simulations of expanding ultracold neutral plasmas, including a full treatment of the strongly coupled ion dynamics. Thereby, the relaxation dynamics of the expanding laser-cooled plasma is studied, taking into account elastic as well as inelastic collisions. It is demonstrated that, depending on the initial conditions, the ionic component of the plasma may exhibit short-range order or even a superimposed long-range order resulting in concentric ion shells. In contrast to ionic plasmas confined in traps, the shell structures are built up from the center of the plasma cloud rather than from the periphery

    On knotted streamtubes in incompressible hydrodynamical flow and a restricted conserved quantity

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    For certain families of fluid flow, a new conserved quantity -- stream-helicity -- has been established.Using examples of linked and knotted streamtubes, it has been shown that stream-helicity does, in certain cases, entertain itself with a very precise topological meaning viz, measure of the degree of knottedness or linkage of streamtubes.As a consequence, stream-helicity emerges as a robust topological invariant.Comment: This extended version is the basically a more clarified version of the previous submission physics/0611166v

    On the formation and decay of a molecular ultracold plasma

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    Double-resonant photoexcitation of nitric oxide in a molecular beam creates a dense ensemble of 50f(2)50f(2) Rydberg states, which evolves to form a plasma of free electrons trapped in the potential well of an NO+^+ spacecharge. The plasma travels at the velocity of the molecular beam, and, on passing through a grounded grid, yields an electron time-of-flight signal that gauges the plasma size and quantity of trapped electrons. This plasma expands at a rate that fits with an electron temperature as low as 5 K, colder that typically observed for atomic ultracold plasmas. The recombination of molecular NO+^+ cations with electrons forms neutral molecules excited by more than twice the energy of the NO chemical bond, and the question arises whether neutral fragmentation plays a role in shaping the redistribution of energy and particle density that directs the short-time evolution from Rydberg gas to plasma. To explore this question, we adapt a coupled rate-equations model established for atomic ultracold plasmas to describe the energy-grained avalanche of electron-Rydberg and electron-ion collisions in our system. Adding channels of Rydberg predissociation and two-body, electron- cation dissociative recombination to the atomic formalism, we investigate the kinetics by which this relaxation distributes particle density and energy over Rydberg states, free electrons and neutral fragments. The results of this investigation suggest some mechanisms by which molecular fragmentation channels can affect the state of the plasma

    Electron Temperature Evolution in Expanding Ultracold Neutral Plasmas

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    We have used the free expansion of ultracold neutral plasmas as a time-resolved probe of electron temperature. A combination of experimental measurements of the ion expansion velocity and numerical simulations characterize the crossover from an elastic-collision regime at low initial Gamma_e, which is dominated by adiabatic cooling of the electrons, to the regime of high Gamma_e in which inelastic processes drastically heat the electrons. We identify the time scales and relative contributions of various processes, and experimentally show the importance of radiative decay and disorder-induced electron heating for the first time in ultracold neutral plasmas
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